Mounting glossy prints

Care needed.

I finally got around to mounting some glossy prints made on the HP paper I received as a gift.

The Seal 160M.

I use a Seal 160M press which I bought ages ago, used, on eBay for some $400 + half my net worth in shipping. It weighs a ton! They are still in business and even shipped me some missing nuts no charge. Today’s price- some $1,400 – reflects the uncompetitive cost of US labor. Will we ever see a flood of cheap ones from China? After all, a press is just a couple of slabs of cast iron and a heater. I doubt it. Few make big prints for mounting any more and I doubt the replacement market in commercial businesses is significant.

Only a fool buys these new. They regularly crop up for $250-500 used and all parts are readily available, not that there’s much to go wrong. The 160M weighs 60 lbs so try to buy locally. The 210M comes in at a whopping 75 lbs. Buy locally and bring a friend.

Typical eBay selling price – this is for the 210M. The 210M has two pressure adjustment knobs in contrast to one for the smaller 160M

The device could not be simpler, so if the heater or thermostat blows, replacement is cheap and the process simple. The whole thing is made up of less than two dozen parts, and B&H carries the essential ones. Framers’ Island also carries spares, including thermostats.

Not exactly complex ….

You can read all about mounting prints here.

I turned the temperature down from my usual 190F (HP Satin) to 170F for the glossy and also first removed the heated platen and gave it a thorough scrubbing with steel wool to remove any surface imperfections. You know how glossy is! Further, I’m careful to keep the release paper (prevents the print sticking to the heated platen) in a dust proof bag to avoid ingress of particulate matter which could mar the surface.

The results are simply spectacular. The surface loses a minor amount of gloss (it will much more at 195F so temperature seems critical) and there’s not a divot or scratch to be seen. But it is a labor of love! The faster these prints go behind glass, the better.

Mounted glossy prints with helper.

To learn more about the Seal press click the download buttons below. If you track down a used one, look for the S or M designation in the model number, indicating it’s a later model which does not use asbestos in the wiring insulation. Life’s too short as it is.

Download the Seal 160M/210M manual. 160M – up to 2×18.5″,
210M up to 2×23″. Both accommodate any length.

Download the Seal 110S manual – up to 2×12″

The maximum width of a board which these will accept is twice the larger dimension of the platen – you simply flip the board around. Overlapping/reheating a previously sealed area has no deleterious effect. The maximum length is infinite as you simply slide the board sequentially through the press. A 13″ x 19″ print needs two passes in my 160M, whereas an 18″ x 24″ requires four, both when centrally mounted on a 22″ x 28″ mat. It’s the size of the mat, not of the print, which constrains capacity. 2 minutes under pressure per ‘press’ using Drymount mounting tissue and release paper does the trick.

Nothing beats a professionally mounted print and, as I have written before, I am still searching for evidence of fading or discoloration in prints I mounted almost 40 years ago using a domestic iron. So when snake oil salesmen come calling, telling you that heat mounted prints fade, ask to see the evidence.

Tomorrow’s books

Well done, Al Gore!

Al Gore’s new interactive book – click the right arrow to view.

Following up on his movie about the environment, ‘An Inconvenient Truth’, Nobel laureate Al Gore has published an interactive book named ‘Our Choice’ which can be downloaded from Apple’s App Store for $5. (Not via iBooks). It is simply superb and you would expect no less from a member of Apple’s Board of Directors. Whether you agree with the content is not the point here. This is a peek into the future of books and I recommend its purchase with great enthusiasm. The level of interactivity – photos, charts, videos, voiceovers – is beautifully done.

The application used to design and create the book was created by a couple of Apple engineers (no surprises there!) at a business aptly named Push Pop Press and the exciting part is that they hope to release a Mac desktop application which will allow anyone to emulate the technology in Gore’s book. Imagine the possibilities with photo books – clickable voice overs, pictures which enlarge and fold out when clicked, videos in ‘how to’ manuals, you name it. It should work well for both the art and technology sides of photography.

I can’t wait to get my copy, which will put the simple eBooks I have created to shame. Click ‘My Books’ at the right to see these.

Update:

Sadly Push Pop Press has been acquired by scummy Facebook and the book app will never see the light of day. Look here for more details.

Kevin Moore

A photographer-artist.

I came across Kevin Moore’s work when he left a comment on a piece I had written detailing my open heart surgery on the HP DesignJet printer, which may have brought another one of these wonderful beasts back to the land of the living.

Any photographer commenting here and leaving a web site URL will have me checking out his work and I loved what I saw of Kevin’s oeuvre.

Here are a few words from Kevin on his history and goals:

About Me:
In my photography I am trying (like I think we all are) to be unique, and original. I am also trying to emulate the emotions I feel for my photographs and relate them to my audience through the compositions, tones, contrast, and focal points of my subjects. I will be having my first show including my photography and paint on canvas works here in Seattle sometime in June or July.

I was born in Hope, Rhode Island outside of Providence and am currently residing in the beautiful northwest city of Seattle. I have worked with many mediums and on many surfaces over the years, and am using my combination of experiences in both art and life to express my artistic desires. Not only is beauty in the eye of the beholder, but it can be found in every facet of one’s life. I was going to suggest opening your eyes, but then I realized beauty also lies behind closed lids. I hope you enjoy my works.

Some of my favorites from Kevin’s elegant site:

From the series ‘Smoke and Mirrors’

From the series ‘Civilized Decay’

From the series ‘Civilized Decay’

From the series ‘Manipulated’

From the series ‘Paint on Canvas’

Kevin has limited the number of images on his site and has done a superb job of design. I think you will enjoy them.

Jackson Square

Not a square, but quite lovely.

Jackson Square is a small area one block north of the Transamerica pyramid in San Francisco. It’s home to high end decorator, architect and antique businesses. It’s really only a couple of streets and alleyways, not a square, but there are many gems to be spotted there.

Jackson ‘Square’.

All of these were snapped within a minute or two.

All on the Panasonic G1 with the kit lens, ISO 320.

David Hobby

The power of the web exemplified.

Perhaps the greatest change wrought by the internet on commerce is the destruction of the middleman. That mostly means the high street retailer. From tires to books to eyeglasses, no store is required. Just a warehouse, a good web site and UPS.

One example of this is in the work of the photographer and lighting expert David Hobby, who levered his redundancy pay into a successful website which addresses photographic lighting and is now making good money from taking his lecture show on the road. Congratulations! Embrace change or be killed by it.

For more from Slate click the picture and be sure to view the embedded slide show.

Click the picture for the story.